Title of article
Thermodynamically based profiling of drug metabolism and drug–drug metabolic interactions: A case study of acetaminophen and ethanol toxic interaction Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Feng Yang، نويسنده , , Daniel A. Beard and Tamar Schlick، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
14
From page
121
To page
134
Abstract
Drug–drug metabolic interactions can result in unwanted side effects, including reduced drug efficacy and formation of toxic metabolic intermediates. In this work, thermodynamic constraints on non-equilibrium metabolite concentrations are used to reveal the biochemical interactions between the metabolic pathways of ethanol and acetaminophen (N-acetyl-p-aminophenol), two drugs known to interact unfavorably. It is known that many reactions of these pathways are coupled to the central energy metabolic reactions through a number of metabolites and the cellular redox potential. Based on these observations, a metabolic network model has been constructed and a database of thermodynamic properties for all participating metabolites and reactions has been compiled. Constraint-based computational analysis of the feasible metabolite concentrations reveals that the non-toxic pathways for APAP metabolism and the pathway for detoxifying N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine (NAPQI) are inhibited by network interactions with ethanol metabolism. These results point to the potential utility of thermodynamically based profiling of metabolic network interactions in screening of drug candidates and analysis of potential toxicity.
Keywords
Computational model , Drug–drug interaction , Network thermodynamics , Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity , Drug metabolism
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Record number
1113809
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